论文标题

想象中的与记忆的故事:量化叙事流程的差异

Imagined versus Remembered Stories: Quantifying Differences in Narrative Flow

论文作者

Sap, Maarten, Jafarpour, Anna, Choi, Yejin, Smith, Noah A., Pennebaker, James W., Horvitz, Eric

论文摘要

终身经历和学识的知识导致对共同情况如何倾向于展开的共同期望。这种叙事事件流的知识使人们能够编织一个故事。但是,可比较的计算工具评估叙事中事件的流动是有限的。我们通过引入顺序,衡量事件的叙事流程,从尖端的大语言模型(GPT-3)绘制概率推断,从而量化了自传和想象的故事之间的差异。顺序性通过在有没有先前的故事上下文中比较句子的概率来捕捉叙事的流动。我们采用了衡量标准来研究数千个类似日记的故事,这些故事是从人群工作者那里收集的,涉及最近被记住的经历或关于同一主题的想象中的故事。结果表明,想象中的故事比自传故事具有更高的顺序性,并且几个月后的记忆重新记忆时,自传故事的顺序就会增加。为了深入了解顺序如何衡量叙事的流动,我们探索了众劳工的注释,探索了故事句子中的重大事件和小事件的比例。我们发现较低的顺序性与较高比例的重大事件有关。这些方法和结果强调了在大型匹配的想象和自传故事中使用尖端计算分析(例如顺序性)的机会,以研究记忆和推理对语言生成过程的影响。

Lifelong experiences and learned knowledge lead to shared expectations about how common situations tend to unfold. Such knowledge of narrative event flow enables people to weave together a story. However, comparable computational tools to evaluate the flow of events in narratives are limited. We quantify the differences between autobiographical and imagined stories by introducing sequentiality, a measure of narrative flow of events, drawing probabilistic inferences from a cutting-edge large language model (GPT-3). Sequentiality captures the flow of a narrative by comparing the probability of a sentence with and without its preceding story context. We applied our measure to study thousands of diary-like stories, collected from crowdworkers about either a recent remembered experience or an imagined story on the same topic. The results show that imagined stories have higher sequentiality than autobiographical stories and that the sequentiality of autobiographical stories increases when the memories are retold several months later. In pursuit of deeper understandings of how sequentiality measures the flow of narratives, we explore proportions of major and minor events in story sentences, as annotated by crowdworkers. We find that lower sequentiality is associated with higher proportions of major events. The methods and results highlight opportunities to use cutting-edge computational analyses, such as sequentiality, on large corpora of matched imagined and autobiographical stories to investigate the influences of memory and reasoning on language generation processes.

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